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Need to find a mouse compatible with Linux

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    #16
    I notice in system settings > input devices > touchpad that the synaptics driver is installed or not used. It is installed (xserver-xorg-input-synaptics), so I guess it's just that I don't have a touchpad yet.

    Are all touchpads compativle with a synaptics driver?
    'I must have a prodigious quantity of mind; it takes me as much as a week sometimes to make it up.' Mark Twain

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      #17
      Looking at your bottom line. What is he advantage of kdesudo over sudo in a konsole screen? That's what I always do.
      'I must have a prodigious quantity of mind; it takes me as much as a week sometimes to make it up.' Mark Twain

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        #18
        Originally posted by claydoh View Post
        Do we all realize that we are all necroposting here?
        Well, joneall started it! I hadn't even noticed.
        Xenix/UNIX user since 1985 | Linux user since 1991 | Was registered Linux user #163544

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          #19
          @joneall you can assume that the base functionality of any mouse, trackball and touchpad will work out of the box. (This is a thread from 2013, that's why they're calling it "necro"). I haven't tried any trackpad features so I can't comment on 'gestures' and the like.

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            #20
            The KDE4 touchpad notifier was a little buggy though. It regularly told me my touchpad had stopped working when that was not the case .

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              #21
              Originally posted by joneall View Post
              Looking at your bottom line. What is he advantage of kdesudo over sudo in a konsole screen? That's what I always do.
              kdesudo is for gui programs , not for console-specific ones.

              Using sudo, a program is run with root's privileges, but with the user's configurations.
              Using kdesudo (or gksu/gksudo in Ubuntu), it uses root's configurations, and also copies
              .Xauthority to a tmp directory. This prevents files in your home directory becoming
              owned by root.

              Running something graphical with sudo is not a guarantee that a config file will change ownership, but makes the likelihood much greater, especially if one changes a setting for that app.

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